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The coming age of virtual organizations: The early history and future of geographically-distributed collaboration. Thomas Finholt School of Information University of Michigan. Outline. The changing nature of geographically-distributed collaboration Lessons from the past
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The coming age of virtual organizations: The early history and future of geographically-distributed collaboration Thomas FinholtSchool of InformationUniversity of Michigan
Outline • The changing nature of geographically-distributed collaboration • Lessons from the past • Beyond being there: A research program for virtual organizations • Conclusion
1. The changing nature of geographically-distributed collaboration • Changes have a history (i.e., practices and technology evolve) • These changes can be described in terms of: • Scale • Theoretical orientation • Technological paradigm • Characteristic research questions
History • In terms of distributed work we are at a transition • Specifically, much of what came before had a traditional antecedent • Collaboratory = a laboratory without walls • Video conferencing = a long distance face-to-face meeting • However much of what is emerging has no precedent(e.g., crowdsourcing, virtual organization)
2. Lessons from the past • Collaboratory research at the University of Michigan • Space physics (UARC and SPARC) • Earthquake engineering (NEES) • Science of Collaboratories (NSF ITR) • Organized through the Collaboratory for Research on Electronic Work (CREW) • Founded in 1997 • Dozens of faculty, staff and students Available November 2008 from MIT Press
Domain scientists • Power distance • Hierarchical • Bias toward seniority • Individualist • “individual genius” • Solo PI model • Masculine • Adversarial • Competitive • Uncertainty avoidance • Highly skeptical of new technologies • Extremely risk averse
CI developers • Power distance • Egalitarian • Bias toward talent • Individualist • Use the Internet to create worldwide communities • Project model • Masculine • Adversarial • Competitive • Uncertainty avoidance • Extremely open to new technologies • Extremely risk seeking
3. Beyond being there: A research program for virtual organizations • NSF workshop on virtual organizations • September 2007 • 42 invited participants • Technical • Social science • Building Effective Virtual Organizations • January 2008 • 200 participants • Virtual Organizations as Socio-technical Systems • NSF program run by the Office of Cyberinfrastructure • Awards made summer 2008 http://www.ci.uchicago.edu/events/VirtOrg2008/VO_report.pdf
It can be tough to recognize successful innovations • First efforts are often awkward hybrids • It is hard to know where the seeds of greatness might lie... Charles King’s “horseless carriage” (1896) Detroit, Michigan Source: American Automobile Manufacturers Association, http://www.automuseum.com/carhistory.html
Unique aspects of virtual radical collocation • Create advantages of physical proximity at a distance • Peripheral participation • Add new capabilities • Multi-megapixel visualization • Therefore: • Benefits of collocation (e.g., realistic and natural communication) • Benefits of dispersion (e.g., access to data and expertise not available locally)
Unique aspects of crowdsourcing • We don’t know who is going to do the work • Effort is contributed voluntarily • Therefore: • Signaling (i.e., of task content) is important in order to attract the right kind of workers • Incentives are important in order to motivate workers (i.e., what is gained by doing the work)
MEDICUS Project (federated medical images)http://dev.globus.org/wiki/Incubator/MEDICUS
Unique aspects of delegating organizational work • Much of the attention in virtual work has focused on technology and process to support social ties • An alternative course is the use of technology to supplant social ties • Therefore: • Think of this as organizing without the work of organizing • Questions of who to trust, who is permitted to use resources, who pays -- are managed by middleware
4. Conclusion • Group work is an inevitable fact of organizational life – so the earlier lessons continue to apply • What has changed is that geographically-distributed work now encompasses a broader continuum of activities, from intensive team projects to crowdsourcing • Emerging modes of contribution and participation are not as amenable to intentional technology choice or organizational design • Full exploitation of emerging paradigms will require: • More research on “choice architecture” and the design of incentives • More research on mechanisms for delegating aspects of organizational work to systems, such as trust relationships